The CEO of AFRINIC signs today a Letter of Intent with the ITU-BDT Director Mr 
Ibrahima Sanou to promote and support IPv6 Deployment throughout Africa


Geneva, Switzerland, 12 May 2013 – The International Telecommunication Union 
today signed a letter of intent with the African Network Information Centre 
(AFRINIC) on the promotion of IPv6. The letter of intent seeks to establish a 
high-level framework of cooperation to carry out a number of activities to 
improve the implementation of IPv6, through the provision of technical 
assistance to African countries.

“Areas of cooperation include, among others, the development and delivery of 
joint capacity-building programmes and knowledge sharing,” said Mr Brahima 
Sanou, Director of the Telecommunications Development Bureau (BDT). 
“Accelerating the transition from IPv4 to IPv6 is an important matter for ITU 
Member States and Sector Members.”

“Currently, 99.4 per cent of physical objects that may one day be part of the 
“Internet of Things” are still unconnected,” explained Mr Sanou. “Moreover, 
large areas of the world remain unserved or under-served by Internet 
connections.   One of the key technologies that can enable progress in Internet 
connectivity is IPv6. IPv6 will ensure better and increased connectivity, 
better access to resources and to knowledge.”

"The future of the Internet is on IPv6 and Africa cannot afford to be left 
behind," said Mr Adiel Akplogan, AFRINIC Chief Executive Officer. "This 
agreement is an important milestone in AFRINIC's cooperation with ITU. As the 
Internet is becoming more and more critical to our emerging economies, it is 
equally critical for our operators, public or private, to safeguard the 
Internet’s future by building networks that are scalable, resilient and ready 
to run with the new version of the protocol - IPv6. This is the only way that 
we can ensure open access and a permission- less innovation capability for the 
millions of future Internet users coming from our region.”

Since its inception AFRINIC has invested heavily in efforts in building human 
capital. This investment is meant to provide the knowledge and skills necessary 
to manage the Internet in the African and Indian Ocean region. Conducted under 
the ambit of capacity building, the programme is supported by AFRINIC’s avowed 
mission “to support Internet Technology usage and development across the 
continent”. This means that AFRINIC has made training a central part of its 
activities. Since 2005 AFRINIC has held almost 100 trainings and workshops in 
50 countries around Africa, training more than 2 000 Engineers.

Every device connected to the Internet is identified by a unique IP address, 
used to route the data packets globally across the net. The current addressing 
system, called IP version 4, or IPv4 was deployed in 1983. However, the 
depletion of IPv4 addresses has been a concern since the late 1980s, when the 
Internet started to experience dramatic growth. IPv6 was developed to solve the 
crisis of IPv4 exhaustion.

Future growth of the Internet will require IPv6, with its extremely large 
address space — it exceeds 340 trillion, trillion, trillion (or 340 undecillion 
addresses). To give a more tangible idea of the scale, some have compared the 
number of available IPv6 addresses to the number of grains of sand on the 
planet.

The BDT Director and the Director of the Telecommunication Standardization 
Bureau (TSB) have initiated a joint project to help developing countries. The 
two Directors have also established a website that provides information about 
global activities being undertaken by relevant entities in the Internet 
community, for example, RIRs, local Internet registries, operator groups, and 
the Internet Society (ISOC).

The letter of intent was signed by Mr Brahima Sanou and Mr Adiel Akplogan at 
ITU Headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. Read the full Letter of Intent.

 For more information please visit our website www.afrinic.net


Vymala Thuron
Marketing and PR Manager, AFRINIC Ltd.
t:  +230 403 5128 | f: +230 466 6758 | tt: @afrinic | w: www.afrinic.net
facebook.com/afrinic | flickr.com/afrinic | youtube.com/afrinicmedia
Skype: vymala.thuron

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